The airport first opened in 1911 as
Oklahoma City Municipal Airfield. It was renamed in Rogers' honor in 1941. During
World War II, Will Rogers Field was a major training facility for the
United States Army Air Forces; many fighter and bomber units were activated and received initial training there. Army Air Forces groups known to have been stationed at Will Rogers Field include: •
44th Bombardment Group (Heavy) July 1942 - August 28, 1942 •
46th Bombardment Group (Light) November 1942 - October 1943 •
47th Bombardment Group (Light) February 16, 1942 - July 18, 1942 •
48th Bombardment Group (Light) May 22, 1941 - February 7, 1942 •
86th Bombardment Group (Light) February 10, 1942 - June 20, 1942 •
311th Bombardment Group (Light) March 2, 1942 - July 4, 1942 •
312th Bombardment Group (Light) June 1942 - August 1942 •
409th Bombardment Group (Light) June 1, 1943 - October 1943 •
410th Bombardment Group (Light) July 1, 1943 - October 1943 •
411th Bombardment Group (Light) August 1, 1943 - August 15, 1943 •
416th Bombardment Group (Light) February 5, 1943 - June 4, 1943 •
417th Bombardment Group (Light) March 28, 1943 - August 4, 1943 •
9th Photographic Group (Reconnaissance) October 1, 1943 - May 6, 1944 •
2d Reconnaissance Group October 7, 1943 - May 1, 1944 •
70th Tactical Reconnaissance Group November 14, 1943 – November 30, 1943 After completion of their initial training, these units were reassigned to other airfields for secondary training before deployment overseas.
Postwar at Will Rogers Field, 1944|300px The December 1951 C&GS chart showed four runways: the 5497-ft runway 3, 3801-ft runway 8, 5652-ft runway 12 and 5100-ft runway 17. The April 1957 OAG showed 21 daily nonstop departures on
Braniff International Airways, 15 on
American Airlines, five on
Central Airlines, four on
Continental Airlines and three on
TWA. A TWA Constellation aircraft flew nonstop from Oklahoma City to Los Angeles, but eastward nonstops didn't reach beyond
Wichita, Kansas,
Tulsa or
Dallas, Texas. Oklahoma City began nonstop flights to Chicago starting in 1966.
2000–present Great Plains Airlines, a regional airline based in
Tulsa, Oklahoma, made Will Rogers World Airport a hub in 2001 with nonstop flights to Tulsa,
Albuquerque, New Mexico, and
Colorado Springs, Colorado and direct or connecting flights to
Nashville, Tennessee,
St. Louis,
Chicago, and
Washington. The airline had hoped to reach additional East- and West-Coast markets but declared bankruptcy and ceased operations on January 23, 2004. On
May 31, 2013, an EF-1 tornado hit Will Rogers Airport. The 1.4-mile wide tornado traveled 10.4 miles, including across the northern side of the airport. The path of the tornado passed over the facilities of MetroTech, the FAA, the Oklahoma National Guard, AAR, the Four Points Hotel, and the passenger terminal and hangars on the north and east side of the airport. Minor damage was reported at AAR and other buildings in this path.
The Parking Spot location north of the airport on Meridian Avenue was also hit by the tornado. The company decided in August 2013 not to re-open the facility and exit the OKC market. The airport once partnered with
Tinker AFB in presenting Aerospace America
airshow. On August 27, 2024, the city council of Oklahoma City approved a name change for the airport proposed by the OKC Airport Trust, officially changing the airport's name from "Will Rogers World Airport" to "OKC Will Rogers International Airport". It was announced in 2024 that the airport plans to expand routes to Mexico and the Caribbean in 2025. On March 26, 2025, the airport's first nonstop international destination was announced.
American Airlines began nonstop service to
Cancún, Mexico on November 8, 2025. ==Terminal==